Here it is -all in one place. But it's more than a just a
historical voting statistical reference. It's a confirmation of pervasive vote
miscounts.

Historical votes cast is a
Census statistical measure that is a key to unlocking fraudulent counts. Only
the official recorded vote is displayed on web sites or in statistical
publications.The Net Uncounted Vote
is the difference between votes cast and the recorded vote.

Net Uncounted Vote = Votes Cast – Votes Recorded

The number of votes cast usually exceed votes recorded (i.e.
there are more uncounted votes than stuffed ballots). But in some states (see
FL 2004 and OH 2004) the number of votes recorded exceeded the number cast;
there were more stuffed votes than uncounted ballots. The Census does not break
out uncounted votes and stuffed ballots.But given the Net Uncounted Vote and either the number of uncounted (or
stuffed) ballots, we can calculate an approximate number of stuffed (or
uncounted) ballots.

The allocation of Net Uncounted Votes added 1.6% to the
average recorded Democratic share. Of 306 state
elections between 1988 and 2008, 271 had net uncounted votes (more votes cast than recorded). Only 35 had net stuffed (more votes recorded than
cast). Of the 35, 13 were in 2004.

But the formula is a simplification. It assumes either uncounted or stuffed ballots, but not both.If there are uncounted and stuffed ballots,
then there must be more uncounted (and stuffed) ballots than indicated by the
Net Uncounted (Stuffed) figure.

For example, assume the Net Uncounted Vote is 200,000. It could
be the net of 300,000 uncounted and 100,000 stuffed ballots, or 400,000 and
200,000, etc. In any case, the Democrat does better than if only the 200,000
net uncounted votes are allocated; there are more uncounted votes and stuffed
ballots. Therefore, the Democratic True vote must be higher than the adjusted
vote based on votes cast.

The margin of error for total national votes cast is 0.3%
(+/- 300,000 votes in an election of 100 million). The MoE
for a state ranges from 1 to 2.5% based on the population.

In 1988, there were 10.6 million net uncounted votes. In
2004, as a result of the installation of HAVA electronic voting machines, the
net uncounted vote fell to 3.45 million. Old-fashioned vote suppression and
uncounted votes in the battleground states were insufficient to guarantee a
Bush victory. But now Diebold / ES&S would be doing the counting.

The Democrats won the average recorded vote by 48.1-46.0%.
Of course, they did better than that in the unadjusted aggregate
state exit poll, 50.1-43.9%. It is
interesting that when net uncounted votes are allocated and added back to the
recorded vote, the Democrats won by a nearly identical 49.7-44.8%!

It is not commonly
known that final exit polls found on
media publications and websites are always forced to match the recorded
vote. Exit poll category weights and/or vote shares are changed to force the
match.

Uncounted votes are just one component of election fraud and
accounted for approximately 1/3 of the discrepancy between the recorded and
True Vote. Stuffed ballots and switched votes on electronic voting machines
accounted for the rest. Note the trend in the deviation between the Democratic
adjusted and recorded vote share:

There were just eight elections between
1988 and 2004 in which there were at least 50,000 net stuffed votes.

In 2004, FL (238k), OH (143k) and VA (64k) had more votes
recorded than cast.Kerry won the unadjusted exit polls and lost the recorded vote in each
of them. In Ohio,
uncounted votes alone cost Kerry the election. A combination of 350k uncounted
votes and nearly 500k stuffed/switched ballots turned an 8.5% win into a 2.1%
recorded loss.In FL, a combination of
uncounted and switched/stuffed ballots also cost him the election. He may have
won VA.

States with more
than 50,000 net stuffed votes

(in thousands)

VotesVotesNetAdjustedUnadj.Exit
Poll

StateElectCastRecordedStuffedDemRep/castDemRepWPDDemRep

CO200016331741(108)42.4%50.8%-6.6%45.2%47.5%(5.6)45.2%48.0%

CT200415241579(55)54.3%43.9%-3.6%56.3%41.9%(16.0)62.3%35.9%

CT200013321460(128)55.9%38.4%-9.6%61.3%32.6%(0.9)56.4%38.0%

FL200473727610(238)47.1%52.1%-3.2%48.6%50.6%(7.8)51.0%48.2%

MN200023762439(63)47.9%45.5%-2.6%49.2%44.1%0.5 47.7%45.8%

OH200454855628(143)48.7%50.8%-2.6%50.0%49.5%(10.6)54.0%45.5%

TN200423192437(118)42.5%56.8%-5.1%44.7%54.6%(1.3)43.2%56.1%

VA200431343198(64)45.5%53.7%-2.1%46.4%52.7%(8.7)49.8%49.3%

The True Vote is
calculated based on votes cast in the
prior election (adjusted for mortality and returning voter turnout) as well
as the current. Final NEP vote shares were applied except for 2004 in which the
preliminary 12:22am shares
were used. The average Democratic True Vote from 1988 to 2008 was 53.0%. If randomly selected exit poll precincts were
based on prior election recorded votes, the exit polls had a pro-Republican
bias.

Florida 2000

Bush won by 537 votes (48.8-48.8%). But there were
approximately 185,000 uncounted votes, a combination of 65,000 undervotes, 110,000 overvotes and
10,000 butterfly ballots. Approximately 140,000 were Gore votes. According to
the Census, there were 43,000 NET uncounted. Using the above formula, the
approximate number of stuffed ballots can be calculated.

Since Net Uncounted = 43,000 = 185,000 - stuffed, there were
approximately 142,000 stuffed ballots. Assuming they were stuffed for Bush,
Gore won by approximately 236,000 votes (50.8-46.9%). The unadjusted exit poll
had Gore winning by 49.1-47.9%. The WPD was a tiny 0.6%. The 1.3% margin of
error is +/-78,000 for six million votes cast.

Florida 2000GoreBushOther

Recorded2912k2913k138k

Uncounted140450

------------

Adjusted30522958138

Stuffed0-1420

------------

True Vote30522816138

Vote share50.8%46.9%2.3%

Florida 2004

Bush won the recorded vote by 52.1-47.1%, a 380,000 margin.
According to the Census, there were 238,000 net stuffed ballots. Assuming
200,000 were uncounted, there were approximately 438,000 stuffed ballots. If
they were stuffed for Bush, Kerry won by 157,000 votes, 50.6-48.6%, nearly
matching the exit poll (51.0-48.2%). The WPD was a huge 7.8%. The 1.3% margin
of error is +/-90,000 for 7 million votes cast.

Florida 2004Kerry
BushOther

Recorded35843965k62k

Uncounted
150500

-------- ----

Adjusted3734401562

Stuffed0-4380

-------- ----

True Vote3734357762

Vote share50.6%48.6%0.8%

Ohio 2004

Bush won by 119,000 votes. But there were 143,000 net
stuffed ballots. According to RFK in his Rolling Stone article, there were
350,000 uncounted votes. Therefore, using the above formula, 493,000 were
stuffed. Applying the uncounted and stuffed ballots to the recorded vote, Kerry
won by 54.7-44.8%, a 544,000 vote margin. This is again very close to the
unadjusted exit poll (10.6% WPD) that Kerry won by 54.0-45.5%. The 1.5% margin
of error is +/- 80,000 for 5.5 million votes cast.

Ohio 2004Kerry
BushOther

Recorded2741k2860k27k

Uncounted
260900

------------

Adjusted3001295027

Stuffed0-4930

------------

True Vote3001245727

Vote share54.7%44.8%0.5%

New York 2004

Kerry won by 58.4-40.1%, a 1.35 million vote margin out of
7.39 million recorded. Election Day votes were cast on lever machines and
approximately 500,000 were late paper ballot votes. There were 307,000 net
uncounted votes, so 7.70 million were cast. There were at least 307,000 more uncounted votes (spoiled,
provisional, absentee ballots) than stuffed/ switched ballots. According to the
exit poll, Kerry won by 2.4 million, 64.5-33.1% (12.2 WPD).Assuming there were 500,000 uncounted ballots
and 400,000 were for Kerry, then 193,000 (500k-307k) ballots were stuffed for
Bush. Approximately 242,000 Kerry votes were switched to Bush..
The precinct vote tabulation was done on central computers – which are
vulnerable to fraudulent data entry and/or malicious programming to switch
and/or stuff votes.